Place chicken in a 4-quart pot, and add water to cover by 1 inch. Bring to a gentle simmer over medium heat, and cook until chicken is cooked through, about 15 minutes. Remove from heat, and let stand 15 minutes. Transfer chicken to a plate, and cover.
Place serrano and poblano chiles directly over the flame of a gas-stove burner on high heat. Roast, turning with tongs, until blackened all over. (Alternatively, broil chiles on a baking
sheet, turning often, until skin has charred.) Transfer chiles to a bowl, and cover with plastic wrap. Let stand for 15 minutes. Peel chiles, and remove stems, seeds, and ribs.
Process roasted chiles, onion, garlic, cilantro leaves, 1/2 cup pepitas, cumin, oregano, and 1/2 cup stock in a blender
until a coarse paste forms.
Heat oil in a 4-quart pot over medium heat. Add paste, and cook, stirring constantly, until very thick, about 9 minutes. (Reduce heat if mixture begins to scorch.) Whisk remaining 1 1/2 cups of stock into paste until incorporated. Let mixture cool slightly, then transfer to blender. Add salt and lime juice. Process until sauce is smooth.
how much oil? I'm I missing something? I don't see it anywhere in the ingredient list.
I just had to respond to Alllisons comment......Please tell your husband to get off his high horse and start preparing meals. Then you can sit in judgement of his abilitiies. Please make sure he makes breakfast lunch and dinner for 2 months straight...so he understands how hard it is to come up with new idea's and not make the same 3 meals over and over again. Or..send him back to his mothers. =)
Let me start by saying I liked it. My husband on the other hand, hated it. He hates things that have the same taste all the way through, and this was one of those things. Even with the rice, seasoned and extra pepitas. I received a barrage of complaints from the first bite ranging from how much he hates chicken unless it is fried and covered in gravy to how he hates the way I cook pork because I don't use shake n bake or Lawry's season salt...so just take that for what it is worth.